Pretty Girls Panic Review (PlayStation 5)

So for our Pretty Girls Panic Review, we discover some socially conservative sea creatures that have constructed a water-filled screen to hide the Pretty Girls from view. but don’t panic! we use our special tool to capture sections of the barrier and remove them, exposing the girl waiting on the other side.

Pretty Girls Panic Review Pros:

  • Nice anime-style graphics.
  • 306.4MB download size.
  • Platinum trophy.
  • Two difficulties – Easy and challenging.
  • Puzzle-type gameplay.
  • Game is where you have to go around a blanked-out image and draw lines to uncover the image. Hitting an enemy will stop you from drawing the line.
  • Power-ups can be picked up by having them in the area you draw.
  • 75 percent is needed to complete the level.
  • Different enemy types that move around uniquely.
  • Destroy/kill enemies by trapping them when clearing a section.
  • 14 Girls to unlock.
  • Each girl has 3 to 5 stages showing off 3 different outfits/swimwear.
  • Gallery lets you view all unlocked girls and outfits/swimwear.
  • You are safe on the side of a drawn area.
  • Help acts like a tutorial.
  • Online leaderboards.
  • Set amount of lives.
  • Simple controls as it’s just the stick to move.
  • Easy Platinum trophy.

Pretty Girls Panic Review Cons:

  • Repetitive gameplay.
  • You can in most instances cheese the game.
  • Music is not that great.
  • The tutorial is very basic.
  • Not sure how the scoring works or even how it shows up.
  • Dubious hit detection.
  • Doesn’t have any sensitivity or slider speed settings.
  • No replay value.
  • Can be finished in an hour or so.

Related Post: Islanders Review (Xbox Series S)

Pretty Girls Panic:

Official website.

Developer: Zoo Corp

Publisher: EastAsiaSoft

Store Links –

PlayStation

Steam

Nintendo

 

Jim Smale

Gaming since the Atari 2600, I enjoy the weirdness in games counting Densha De Go and RC De Go as my favourite titles of all time. I prefer gaming of old where buying games from a shop was a thing, Being social in person was a thing. Join me as I attempt to adapt to this new digital age!

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